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The Boston Bruins will have at least two forward spots to fill before the 2014-15 NHL season.

Given the lack of talent on the free agent market, combined with the Bruins’ lack of salary cap space, the best route is to fill the vacant spots on the bottom two lines from within the organization.

Luckily for the B’s, most of these young players already have NHL experience, and some of them were part of last season’s playoff run.

“Right now I think there are three spots there. Maybe at the end of the day there will be two for (the young guys) to vie for,” Bruins general manager Peter Chiarelli said last week. “So I feel good, I think our guys are coming — you’d like them to get a chance. And that is kind of what we are looking at going into the year, and I feel good about it now.”

Let’s examine what the Bruins’ forward lines might look like next season.

Who Replaces Jarome Iginla On The First Line?

Loui Eriksson is the obvious and most logical choice to fill this void. He’s not the rugged, power forward-type player that Iginla is, but Eriksson has underrated strength, and his defensive abilities and high hockey IQ would allow him to mesh well on the top line alongside David Krejci and Milan Lucic.

Chiarelli said last week that he doesn’t have any issues with Eriksson moving up in Boston’s lineup.

“I’m really comfortable with that,” Chiarelli said. “It’s a different look, but he’s a very smart player. He’s a great two-way player. He plays a very smart game. I saw him play with the (Sedin twins) — he can play at that level. … But having said that, he can move down the lineup and he’s comfortable with it. So I mean, the options are there.

“It would be nice to get a right shot — that would be a priority at some point — but I have no problem with Loui (Eriksson) playing on that top line, and I’ve talked to (Krejci) about it, and he welcomes it. If you watch how Loui plays, he plays a real give-and-go game, and he’s very smart, passes to areas. … He’s very compatible with (Krejci).”

Iginla’s 30 goals won’t be easy to replace, but Eriksson scored near that rate as a first-line winger with the Dallas Stars. The 28-year-old winger averaged 29.5 goals per year in his last four non-lockout seasons in Dallas, and that was without a playmaker of Krejci’s caliber playing alongside him.

If Eriksson is healthy on a consistent basis, he’ll be a great fit on the first line.

Second Line Likely Will Be Unchanged

Brad Marchand and Patrice Bergeron have fantastic chemistry after playing alongside each other for about four seasons. They also form one of the league’s best penalty-killing forward duos. Reilly Smith filled the right-wing role next to them last season and in the playoffs while proving he belonged with 51 points (20 goals, 31 assists) in 82 games.

“I like Reilly where he is, and that’s probably where he is going to stay,” Chiarelli said.

What Will the Third and Fourth Lines Look Like?

Daniel Paille could move up to the third line, which is a role he has played a bit in the past. The best option would be for him to stay on the fourth line alongside Gregory Campbell, and that would allow Ryan Spooner to play on the third line as a winger with Carl Soderberg (at center) and Chris Kelly.

A Spooner-Soderberg-Kelly trio would give the Bruins excellent speed, size, playmaking skill and defensive responsibility on the third line. Spooner has shown that his speed is an asset, and even though he projects to be a top-nine center at the NHL level, he’s not skilled enough on faceoffs to play that role right now.

Shawn Thornton’s open spot on the fourth line could be filled by Matt Fraser or Justin Florek. Fraser, who tallied two points in four playoff games, would provide more of a scoring punch to that line. Florek is a more physical and better defensive player. Boston doesn’t need to find an enforcer to replace Thornton because it has at least 4-5 guys willing of dropping the gloves when needed.

Early Projection of Boston’s Forward Lines

Line

Left Wing

Center

Right Wing

1

Milan Lucic

David Krejci

Loui Eriksson

2

Brad Marchand

Patrice Bergeron

Reilly Smith

3

Ryan Spooner

Carl Soderberg

Chris Kelly

4

Matt Fraser

Gregory Campbell

Daniel Paille

Have a Bruins/NHL question for Nick Goss? Send it to him via Twitter at @NickGossNESN

Absolutely spot on. I think Loui will flourish with Krejci. Both cerebral players. And, watch out- Lucic is a scoring machine in hibernation- two guys feeding him? Good luck, opposing D! As much as I love Thorts, that's going to be a better 4th line. I can see Thorton as an ass't coach in the next 5 years. Love to see him back with the B's in some capacity- just was time to bring the youth in.

I don't think Eriksson on the top line is really the problem here for this line to be successful. Loui played first line minutes in Dallas and was great. Problem will be Krejci, he is way to predictable he needs to shoot the puck more, Just watch the last playoffs and you can see he is always looking for the pass even when he is the only logical choice to take the shot. That needs to change, Krejci has a nice shot he needs to realize it and use it more to give that line another element of scoring possibilities

Wow that's a great line up for a girls league, actually that's not fair, Eriksson and Spooner would get run out of a woman's league. That line up doesn't make the playoffs, great job turning the Bruins into pansies Chiarelli.

I couldnt disagree more. I agree with my brother who wrote an article on Chowder and Champions, Loui is NOT an adequate replacement on the top line, especially as a left handed shot, Krejci has always had a right shot right wing.